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Posted

Yes, that is a lot of holes, but I would say pretty much any poplar in East Anglia will have some present.

 

I have anecdotal evidence that smaller trees affected by boring have failed due to white rot at the same level as the boring, this is exactly what happened to the tree I found today. Whether to rot is co-incidental or not remains to be seen.

Posted
Yes, that is a lot of holes, but I would say pretty much any poplar in East Anglia will have some present.

 

I have anecdotal evidence that smaller trees affected by boring have failed due to white rot at the same level as the boring, this is exactly what happened to the tree I found today. Whether to rot is co-incidental or not remains to be seen.

 

 

 

Great shots Peter :thumbup1:

 

now I'm in the area, I'll keep an eye out for pop failures & look for any decay/larvae associations.

 

 

Very interesting thread :001_cool:

 

 

 

.

Posted

Its not far from your house David, I'll pm you the location if you want to go and look at it before someone tidies it all up.

 

Not heard of any larger trees failing interestingly enough, but that tree is the "smoking gun" I'v been looking for, so I'm very pleased.

 

It seems there is no research on stem failure related to boring damage, all the FC research relates to crown dieback. What I want to know is whether increased density of bore holes makes failure more likely, and if so at what point do you decide to remove?

 

What would be the best way to detect decay of that kind in a live tree?

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